The Pioneer Newspaper April 6, 2017

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THE PIONEER Covering the East Bay community since 1961

California State University, East Bay

News, Art, & Culture for the East Bay

¡EDICION EN ESPAÑOL! PAGINA SEIS

THURSDAY APRIL 6, 2017

www.thepioneeronline.com

Spring 2017 Issue 2

New BART station opens in Fremont Pioneer updates on America's president

SEE OPINION PAGE 2

What happened? On Feb. 10, an amendment to the financial trust of President Donald Trump was made to allow him to take money from any of his more than 400 businesses he owns.

TRUMP HEALTHCARE PLAN BAD FOR WOMEN

SEE OPINION PAGE 3

SAN QUENTIN NEWS DISCUSSES PRISON ISSUES

PHOTO BY EVELYN TIJERO/THE PIONEER

SEE SPANISH PAGE 6

DESPITE STRUGGLES, I'LL BE AN A'S FAN FOR LIFE

A view of the new BART station named Warm Springs-South Fremont on Tuesday. The new station opened with limited service on Friday and plans to be fully functional by 2018, according to BART.

Limited service expected until 2018 By Louis LaVenture EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

SEE SPORTS PAGE 8

BASEBALL WINS SERIES AT HOME OVER THE WEEKEND

#PIONEERNEWS /thepioneernewspaper @thepioneeronline @newspioneer

Cal State East Bay announces 'Spring Mayhem' lineup

Richmond rapper IAMSU!

By Louis LaVenture EDITOR-IN-CHIEF On Friday the Associated Students Inc. Special Events announced the lineup for Cal State East Bay’s 2017 ‘Spring Mayhem’ concert, scheduled for 1 p.m. on April 29 in the University Amphitheater. This year’s roster includes Jeremih, K Camp, MadeinTYO with Richmond’s own IAMSU! to headline the event. This is the first year the event will require tickets for admission, which are free for students with a horizon email account. Each student can also receive two guest tickets for the event. Last year’s event featured hip-hop artists Kin Ink and Ty Dolla $ign, the latter of which recently collaborated with Bay Area icon E-40 on last year’s track ‘Saved’.

A huge glass rotunda with bright red letters that spell Warm Springs South Fremont greeted riders on March 25 when the new BART station opened for business. It’s been seven years, just less than $800 million and the new station is running, but not without hiccups. The new station, does not yet offer full service. According to multiple

BART statements, during weekdays, riders that board at the new station can go anywhere on the Daly City line from Warm Springs. But if you're on the Richmond line, you have to get off at the Fremont station and transfer to a northbound train. Then at 6 p.m. and on weekends, the schedule flips and will function this way until 2018 when the station will be fully functional. Many riders that talked to The Pioneer on Monday were confused by the system. One of those riders is Zachary Burnett who is a Fremont resident that works in Antioch and was looking forward to the new transit option for his Monday through Friday commute to work.

“880, 580 and 680 are all so congested, it just makes more sense for me to take BART and avoid the traffic,” Burnett said. “But having to get off at Fremont and switch trains to get to the last stop is crazy to me. It actually adds time to my commute.” Burnett said the transfer process adds about 30 minutes to his commute that is already more than an hour long by car or train. According to BART spokesman Jim Allison, the project was completed $100 million under budget thanks to the process going smooth and not requiring extra construction or service. However, there are not enough trains

SEE BART PAGE 4

Water polo falls to conference rivals Postseason still in reach for women By Marissa Marshall STAFF WRITER The California State East Bay women’s water polo team is now 1-1 against their Women’s Water Polo Association Conference rivals, Sonoma State University. On Friday, the Pioneers went head to head against Sonoma (7-16 overall, 0-1 conference) in Pioneer Pool on the Hayward campus. East Bay won their previous matchup against the Seawolves 8-6, during the UC San Diego Triton Invitational on Feb. 12, but this time around Sonoma got the upper hand on the Pioneers. “We have to keep working hard, and continue to do our homework,” junior utility player Alicia Tully said. “We have been working on staying positive and I think we have the aspect down, we just have to keep going and hope the positive energy translates.” Sonoma got on the board first when sophomore driver Taylor Brown, scored an unassisted goal in the first minute of the first period. Shortly after East Bay responded with two goals by senior driver Nicole Williams and senior two-meter Olivia Mackell. The two teams attacked each other on offense with power and aggression, and neither team allowed the lead to get more than 2 points.

PHOTO BY KEDAR DUTT/THE PIONEER

Cal State East Bay senior two-meter Olivia Mackell looks for an open teammate during the home game against the Sonoma State University Seawolves on Friday at Pioneer Pool on the Hayward campus. The Pioneers fell to the Seawolves 11-10 and are now 10-12 this season. The Seawolves scored another goal after Williams’ and Mackell’s goals and it gave them the lead 3-2 as they headed into the second period. In the second quarter both East Bay and Sonoma scored 3 goals a piece, but Sonoma continued to stay ahead, as they led 6-5. The third period was a completely different story, though. The Pioneers

gained momentum in the period and outscored the Seawolves 4-1. Senior utility player Brandi Carroll was assisted by freshman utility player Auriel Bill and scored in the first 14 seconds of the period to tie the game 6-6. Carroll scored another goal in the quarter, as so did sophomore driver

SEE WATER POLO PAGE 7

On Jan. 11 Trump signed over all operations of his businesses to his two oldest sons, Donald Jr. and Eric, who currently run the day-to-day operations along with Trump’s CFO Allen Weisselberg. The trio would act as trustees of the companies until the end of Trump’s presidency, according to multiple statements from Trump. At a press conference on Jan. 11 Trump told reporters, “I hope at the end of eight years I’ll come back and say ‘oh you did a good job.’” However, since Trump is allowed to access the finances, he will have also be able to see information about the status of the companies. According to documents released by Trump’s administration in January before he took office, Trump tried to distance himself from his business ventures in order to eliminate a conflict of interest. The new amendment, according to the documents signed and released by his lawyers on Feb 10, “shall distribute net income or principal to Donald J. Trump at his request” or whenever his sons and attorney “deem appropriate.” According to Forbes Magazine, Trump is the richest president in U.S. history and it creates some unique challenges when it comes to disassociating from his businesses and eliminating conflict of interest. According to the White House, most presidents use a blind trust to eliminate conflict of interest, which they define as when a person in public office gives up their interests in their businesses for their elected duration. In a blind trust, the party is not allowed information as to how the business is performing. The White House said George Bush, his son George W. Bush, Bill and Hillary Clinton all used blind trusts with the exception of personal real estate, cash accounts, life insurance, bonds and mutual funds. However, according to Forbes Magazine, Barack Obama decided against a blind trust and instead used bank accounts, treasury notes, index funds and college savings, which were all deemed not a conflict of interest and satisfied all of the pertaining laws. Before he became president, Trump was one of the best-known people in the real estate industry, amassing a net worth of $3.9 billion, according to Forbes. His businesses range from hotels and casinos to real estate property, golf courses and even bottled water, Trump Ice. According to the Trump organization, he is listed as a chairman, trustee, president or member of more than 530 businesses or organizations and has at least partial ownership of more than 400 of those. Many critics, like The New York Times and The Washington Post, bashed the plan saying it allowed him access to financial information about the businesses, which creates a conflict of interest. Trump and his representatives still have not addressed the issue but did release a statement through Trump Spokeswoman Amanda Miller, who in late March said, “President Trump believed it was important to create multiple layers of approval for major actions and key business decision.”

By Louis LaVenture Editor-in-Chief


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